Literature DB >> 28165281

Parenting in poverty: Attention bias and anxiety interact to predict parents' perceptions of daily parenting hassles.

Eric D Finegood1, C Cybele Raver1, Meriah L DeJoseph1, Clancy Blair1.   

Abstract

Research has long acknowledged the centrality of parents' subjective experiences in the caregiving role for the organization of parenting behaviors and family functioning. Recent scientific advances in cognitive process models and in the neurobiology of parenting indicate that parenting is shaped in part by conscious and nonconscious cognitive processes. This study extends a growing literature on neurocognitive models of parenting by exploring the extent to which attention processes in parents operate independently and interactively with intrapsychic processes, proximal interpersonal stressors, and the larger socioeconomic context to predict perceptions of parenting hassles in primarily low-income Latino/a parents of young children living in urban areas of concentrated disadvantage (N = 185). Analyses indicated that parent reports of anxiety, intimate partner violence, and perceptions of financial hardship each uniquely predicted parents' perceptions of daily parenting hassles. Parents' attentional bias toward threat interacted with anxiety symptoms such that parents experiencing high levels of attention bias toward threat in combination with high levels of anxiety reported significantly more daily parenting hassles. Findings from the current study provide insight into the ways in which neurocognitive processes affect one aspect of parenting, with implications for programs and policies designed to support parenting for families in poverty. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28165281     DOI: 10.1037/fam0000291

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Fam Psychol        ISSN: 0893-3200


  5 in total

1.  Bound Together: How Psychoanalysis Diminishes Inter-generational DNA Trauma.

Authors:  Roberto Colangeli
Journal:  Am J Psychoanal       Date:  2020-06

2.  Parental buffering in the context of poverty: positive parenting behaviors differentiate young children's stress reactivity profiles.

Authors:  Samantha M Brown; Lisa J Schlueter; Eliana Hurwich-Reiss; Julia Dmitrieva; Elly Miles; Sarah Enos Watamura
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2020-12

Review 3.  The social ecology of childhood and early life adversity.

Authors:  Marcela Lopez; Monica O Ruiz; Cynthia R Rovnaghi; Grace K-Y Tam; Jitka Hiscox; Ian H Gotlib; Donald A Barr; Victor G Carrion; Kanwaljeet J S Anand
Journal:  Pediatr Res       Date:  2021-01-18       Impact factor: 3.756

4.  Frontal Alpha Asymmetry in Response to Stressor Moderates the Relation Between Parenting Hassles and Child Externalizing Problems.

Authors:  Daniel J Mulligan; Ava C Palopoli; Marion I van den Heuvel; Moriah E Thomason; Christopher J Trentacosta
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2022-07-05       Impact factor: 5.152

Review 5.  Research Review: Intergenerational transmission of disadvantage: epigenetics and parents' childhoods as the first exposure.

Authors:  Pamela Scorza; Cristiane S Duarte; Alison E Hipwell; Jonathan Posner; Ana Ortin; Glorisa Canino; Catherine Monk
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2018-02-23       Impact factor: 8.265

  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.